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Vaillancourt, Tracy; Sunderani, Shafik – Brain and Cognition, 2011
Salivary cortisol was examined in relation to indirect aggression and primary psychopathy (i.e., cold affect and interpersonal manipulation) and secondary psychopathy (i.e., criminal tendencies and erratic lifestyle) in a sample of 154 undergraduate students. Results revealed that although psychopathy and indirect aggression were strongly…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Aggression, Role, Psychopathology
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Syal, Supriya; Finlay, Barbara L. – Developmental Science, 2011
Alteration of the organization of social and motivational neuroanatomical circuitry must have been an essential step in the evolution of human language. Development of vocal communication across species, particularly birdsong, and new research on the neural organization and evolution of social and motivational circuitry, together suggest that…
Descriptors: Neurology, Language Acquisition, Neurological Organization, Evolution
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deBraga, Michael; Boyd, Cleo; Abdulnour, Shahad – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2015
A primary goal of university instruction is the students' demonstration of improved, highly developed critical thinking (CT) skills. However, how do faculty encourage CT and its potential concomitant increase in student workload without negatively impacting student perceptions of the course? In this investigation, an advanced biology course is…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Instruction, Learning, Critical Thinking
Bowman, Larry L., Jr.; Govett, Aimee L. – Science Educator, 2015
Twenty-six states voluntarily partnered to provide leadership and guidance for the purpose of adoption of the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). However, a need exists to examine the NGSS versus state standards to better understand changes in curriculum and instruction to make their implementation successful for all states. The present…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Academic Standards, State Standards, National Standards
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Journell, Wayne – Curriculum Journal, 2013
This article addresses the need for researchers to move beyond discipline-specific approaches to research and practice and offers an example of how interdisciplinary understandings can increase knowledge in respective disciplines. The specific focus of the article is the shared challenges of broaching controversy in science and social studies…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Interdisciplinary Approach, Social Studies, Science Instruction
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Village, Andrew; Baker, Sylvia – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2013
A sample of 661 churchgoers from a range of Christian denominations in the United Kingdom was asked about Darwinian evolution (defined as the common origin of all species, including humans). Respondents were categorised as those who accepted the idea, those who rejected it, and those who were unsure or neutral. People in each category were given a…
Descriptors: Churches, Christianity, Religion, Rating Scales
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Taskin, Özgür – Journal of Biological Education, 2013
The present research aims to determine whether or not pre-service science teachers in Turkey are resistant to learning about the theory of evolution (TOE), and to understand the reasons for their acceptance or rejection of this theory. Following an intervention process, essay documents were collected from each participant ("N" = 113) and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Evolution, Preservice Teachers, Student Teacher Attitudes
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Shtulman, Andrew; Calabi, Prassede – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2013
Recent research suggests that a major obstacle to evolution understanding is an essentialist view of the biological world. The present study investigated the effects of formal biology instruction on such misconceptions. Participants (N = 291) completed an assessment of their understanding of six aspects of evolution (variation, inheritance,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Comprehension, Barriers, World Views
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Yang, Chulguen – Business Communication Quarterly, 2013
This article explores the adaptive functions of storytelling in the workplace from an evolutionary perspective. Based on the analysis of ethnographic studies on hunter-gatherer and modern work organizations, this article claims that storytelling, as an adapted cognitive device, was selectively retained by natural and sexual selection, because of…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Organizational Communication, Evolution, Psychology
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Cuiper, Auke – School Science Review, 2014
In this new context concept approach, field research on the Trinidadian guppy is used as an appealing example of evolutionary change in populations. Pupils are asked to investigate the underlying mechanisms. In doing so, defects in their knowledge are revealed, in particular the role of meiosis in creating genetic variation. The reason for these…
Descriptors: Biology, Integrated Curriculum, Integrated Activities, Genetics
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Freeland, Peter – School Science Review, 2010
As a large number of issues in contemporary biology are controversial, science teachers in so-called "faith" schools need to know what their employers regard as "doctrinal correctness". Any effective response to the rise of fundamentalism and atheism needs to answer challenges, take scientific knowledge into consideration and re-think traditional…
Descriptors: Biology, Christianity, Evolution, Creationism
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Depew, David J. – Science & Education, 2010
This essay reviews key controversies in the history of the Darwinian research tradition: the Wilberforce-Huxley debate in 1860, early twentieth-century debates about the heritability of acquired characteristics and the consistency of Mendelian genetics with natural selection; the 1925 Scopes trial about teaching evolution; tensions about race,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Genetics, Essays, Debate
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Plunkett, Andrea D.; Yampolsky, Lev Y. – American Biology Teacher, 2010
We propose an experimental model suitable for demonstrating allele frequency change in Drosophila melanogaster populations caused by selection against an easily scorable conditional lethal, namely recessive flightless alleles such as apterous and vestigial. Homozygotes for these alleles are excluded from reproduction because the food source used…
Descriptors: Evolution, Entomology, Birth, Biology
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Malone, Molly – Science Scope, 2012
Most middle school students comprehend that organisms have adaptations that enable their survival and that successful adaptations prevail in a population over time. Yet they often miss that those bird beaks, moth-wing colors, or whatever traits are the result of random, normal genetic variations that just happen to confer a negative, neutral, or…
Descriptors: Genetics, Multimedia Materials, Misconceptions, Concept Teaching
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Nehm, Ross H.; Haertig, Hendrik – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2012
Our study examines the efficacy of Computer Assisted Scoring (CAS) of open-response text relative to expert human scoring within the complex domain of evolutionary biology. Specifically, we explored whether CAS can diagnose the explanatory elements (or Key Concepts) that comprise undergraduate students' explanatory models of natural selection with…
Descriptors: Evolution, Undergraduate Students, Interrater Reliability, Computers
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